黒い虹Blackrainbow 黒い虹

Sunday, December 25, 2011

Canada
German settlers migrated to Canada from the United States in the 1700s. They brought with them many of the things associated with Christmas we cherish today—Advent calendars, gingerbread houses, cookies—and Christmas trees. When Queen Victoria's German husband, Prince Albert, put up a Christmas tree at Windsor Castle in 1848, the Christmas tree became a tradition throughout England, the United States, and Canada.

MexicoIn most Mexican homes the principal holiday adornment is el Nacimiento (Nativity scene). However, a decorated Christmas tree may be incorporated in the Nacimiento or set up elsewhere in the home. As purchase of a natural pine represents a luxury commodity to most Mexican families, the typical arbolito (little tree) is often an artificial one, a bare branch cut from a copal tree (Bursera microphylla) or some type of shrub collected from the countryside.

Britain
The Norway spruce is the traditional species used to decorate homes in Britain. The Norway spruce was a native species in the British Isles before the last Ice Age, and was reintroduced here before the 1500s.

GreenlandChristmas trees are imported, as no trees live this far north. They are decorated with candles and bright ornaments.

GuatemalaThe Christmas tree has joined the "Nacimiento" (Nativity scene) as a popular ornament because of the large German population in Guatemala. Gifts are left under the tree on Christmas morning for the children. Parents and adults do not exchange gifts until New Year’s Day.

BrazilAlthough Christmas falls during the summer in Brazil, sometimes pine trees are decorated with little pieces of cotton that represent falling snow.

IrelandChristmas trees are bought anytime in December and decorated with colored lights, tinsel, and baubles. Some people favor the angel on top of the tree, others the star. The house is decorated with garlands, candles, holly, and ivy. Wreaths and mistletoe are hung on the door.

SwedenMost people buy Christmas trees well before Christmas Eve, but it's not common to take the tree inside and decorate it until just a few days before. Evergreen trees are decorated with stars, sunbursts, and snowflakes made from straw. Other decorations include colorful wooden animals and straw centerpieces.

NorwayNowadays Norwegians often take a trip to the woods to select a Christmas tree, a trip that their grandfathers probably did not make. The Christmas tree was not introduced into Norway from Germany until the latter half of the 19th century; to the country districts it came even later. When Christmas Eve arrives, there is the decorating of the tree, usually done by the parents behind the closed doors of the living room, while the children wait with excitement outside. A Norwegian ritual known as "circling the Christmas tree" follows, where everyone joins hands to form a ring around the tree and then walk around it singing carols. Afterwards, gifts are distributed.

Ukraine
Celebrated on December 25th by Catholics and on January 7th by Orthodox Christians, Christmas is the most popular holiday in the Ukraine. During the Christmas season, which also includes New Year's Day, people decorate fir trees and have parties.

Spain
A popular Christmas custom is Catalonia, a lucky strike game. A tree trunk is filled with goodies and children hit at the trunk trying to knock out the hazel nuts, almonds, toffee, and other treats.

Italy
In Italy, the presepio (manger or crib) represents in miniature the Holy Family in the stable and is the center of Christmas for families. Guests kneel before it and musicians sing before it . The presepio figures are usually hand-carved and very detailed in features and dress. The scene is often set out in the shape of a triangle. It provides the base of a pyramid-like structure called the ceppo. This is a wooden frame arranged to make a pyramid several feet high. Several tiers of thin shelves are supported by this frame. It is entirely decorated with colored paper, gilt pine cones, and miniature colored pennants. Small candles are fastened to the tapering sides. A star or small doll is hung at the apex of the triangular sides. The shelves above the manger scene have small gifts of fruit, candy, and presents. The ceppo is in the old Tree of Light tradition which became the Christmas tree in other countries. Some houses even have a ceppo for each child in the family.

Germany
Many Christmas traditions practiced around the world today started in Germany.

It has been long thought that Martin Luther began the tradition of bringing a fir tree into the home. According to one legend, late one evening Martin Luther was walking home through the woods and noticed how beautifully the stars shone through the trees. He wanted to share the beauty with his wife so he cut down a fir tree and took it home. Once inside he placed small lighted candles on the branches and said that it would be a symbol of the beautiful Christmas sky, hence, the Christmas tree.

Another legend says that in the early 16th century, people in Germany combined two customs that had been practiced in different countries around the globe. The Paradise tree (a fir tree decorated with apples) represented the Tree of Knowledge in the Garden of Eden. The Christmas Light, a small, pyramid-like frame, usually decorated with glass balls, tinsel, and a candle on top, was a symbol of the birth of Christ as the Light of the World. Changing the tree's apples to tinsel balls and cookies; and combining this new tree with the Light placed on top, the Germans created the tree that many of us know now.

Today, the Tannenbaum (Christmas tree) is traditionally decorated in secret with lights, tinsel, and ornaments by the mother and is lit and revealed on Christmas Eve with cookies, nuts, and gifts under its branches.

SouthAfrica
Christmas is a summer holiday in South Africa. Although Christmas trees are not common, windows are often draped with sparkling cotton wool and tinsel.

SaudiArabiaChristian Americans, Europeans, Indians, Filipinos, and others living here have to celebrate Christmas privately in their homes. Christmas lights are generally not tolerated. Most families place their Christmas trees somewhere inconspicuous.

PhilippinesFresh pine trees are too expensive for many Filipinos, so handmade trees in an array of colors and sizes are often used. Star lanterns, or parol, appear everywhere in December. They are made from bamboo sticks, covered with brightly colored rice paper or cellophane, and usually feature a tassel on each point. There is usually one in every window, each representing the Star of Bethlehem.

ChinaOf the small percentage of Chinese who do celebrate Christmas, most erect artificial trees decorated with spangles and paper chains, flowers, and lanterns. Christmas trees are called "trees of light."

Japan
For most of the Japanese who celebrate Christmas, it's purely a secular holiday devoted to the love of their children. Christmas trees are decorated with small toys, dolls, paper ornaments, gold paper fans and lanterns, and wind chimes. Miniature candles are also put among the tree branches. One of the most popular ornaments is the origami swan. Japanese children have exchanged thousands of folded paper "birds of peace" with young people all over the world as a pledge that war must not happen again.

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Most of you probably heard about this young girl, Dana, the 8 year old struggling with anorexia. I stumbled upon this documentary style video about her and I wanted to share it for comments and thought. I also felt curious about this little girl who being so young struggles with a very serious eating disorder.

This is Dana's story.

Dana is only eight years old anorexic child. She consumed only 175 calories a day and exercised to the point of exhaustion, skipping for an hour after each meal and then running to burn off more calories.

Dana did indeed nearly starve herself to death. Out of the blue, she stopped eating sweets and junk food. Then she stopped eating meat. Then she stopped eating anything and started refusing to drink water.

Her parents dragged her, kicking and screaming, to hospital. She came home after a couple of weeks and agreed to eat small amounts. But she'd exercise obsessively, running up and down the stairs, to keep the weight off.

Her mother said Dana had told her she was hearing voices in her head, telling her not to eat. She also said she wanted to die. After a few weeks, she'd lost a third of her body weight, dropping to three stone.

So her parents dragged her, kicking and screaming again, to the Rhodes Farm Clinic, a residential treatment facility for anorexics.

"Not eating is not an option," said clinic head Dr Dee Dawson, alongside scenes of skeletal teenage girls laboriously chewing on breakfast cereal as though it was broken glass. They all have the same dead eyes and spout the same dead cliches, as though they'd picked them up from a magazine (which maybe they have).

The clinic's policy seems to be to bring the kids in, fatten them up for 12 weeks and then let them home again.

"Anorexia is not really about food, it's a cry for help," said a solemn voiceover. Yes, but help with what?

"It begins with a child who has lots of problems," added Dr Dawson. Yes, but what kind of problems?

Dana is back home, back to her proper weight and eating again. For now. But no one knows why she stopped to begin with.

Her mother said: "We can close the book on this now. It was a little blip in her childhood."

This was a shabby and incurious documentary, as hollow as Dana's empty stomach, that arguably did more damage than good to the drive to understand anorexia. Cutting Edge has lost its cutting edge.

About Me

HELLO EVERYBODY. MY NAME IS MARIELA RECINOS. I AM A TEACHER WHO LOVES TO WORK WITH YOUNG KIDS,TEENAGERS, AND YOUNG ADULTS. I TEACH , ORIGAMI, SPELLING, TECHNOLOGY, JAPANESE AND MY FAVORITE OF ALL….GEO-HISTORY. I LOVE TO READ AND LEARN ABOUT THE EARLY AND THE GREAT CIVILIZATIONS IN OUR WORLD. THUS I FEEL SO ATTRACTED BY THE GREAT OLD CULTURES SUCH AS EGYPTIAN, GREEK, PERSIAN, CHINESE, HINDU, AND OF COURSE, MY FAVORITE…..JAPANESE CULTURE. I HOPE YOU LIKE THE BLOG AND ITS CONTENT. ALL THE COMMENTS AND CRITICS WILL BE RECEIVED GLADLY. GOD BLESS YOU. ARIGATOU GOZAIMASU.